EP0444166A1 - Disposable oxide carrier for scavenging hydrogen sulfide. - Google Patents

Disposable oxide carrier for scavenging hydrogen sulfide.

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Publication number
EP0444166A1
EP0444166A1 EP90912155A EP90912155A EP0444166A1 EP 0444166 A1 EP0444166 A1 EP 0444166A1 EP 90912155 A EP90912155 A EP 90912155A EP 90912155 A EP90912155 A EP 90912155A EP 0444166 A1 EP0444166 A1 EP 0444166A1
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EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
oxide
bed
carrier
hydrogen sulfide
particles
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Granted
Application number
EP90912155A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0444166B1 (en
EP0444166A4 (en
Inventor
Irwin Fox
Alvin Samuels
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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/02Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material
    • B01J20/06Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material comprising oxides or hydroxides of metals not provided for in group B01J20/04
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D53/00Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols
    • B01D53/34Chemical or biological purification of waste gases
    • B01D53/46Removing components of defined structure
    • B01D53/48Sulfur compounds
    • B01D53/485Sulfur compounds containing only one sulfur compound other than sulfur oxides or hydrogen sulfide
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D53/00Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols
    • B01D53/34Chemical or biological purification of waste gases
    • B01D53/46Removing components of defined structure
    • B01D53/48Sulfur compounds
    • B01D53/52Hydrogen sulfide
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/02Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/02Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material
    • B01J20/0203Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material comprising compounds of metals not provided for in B01J20/04
    • B01J20/0225Compounds of Fe, Ru, Os, Co, Rh, Ir, Ni, Pd, Pt
    • B01J20/0229Compounds of Fe
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/02Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material
    • B01J20/10Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material comprising silica or silicate
    • B01J20/12Naturally occurring clays or bleaching earth
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/30Processes for preparing, regenerating, or reactivating
    • B01J20/3078Thermal treatment, e.g. calcining or pyrolizing

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a mineral carrier for ox- ides, advantageously used in packed beds for scavenging hy ⁇ drogen sulfide and mercaptans from fluid streams such as natural gas, liquid hydrocarbons and steam.
  • the wood chip process has for many years been used to scavenge hydrogen sulfide from gas streams . Describing this process generally, a stream of the polluted gas is driven through a bed of moistened wood chips containing a reactant iron oxide. While in widespread use, the process has numerous shortcomings, including that the pressure of the gas stream suffers a severe drop as it passes through the bed, and that as the oxides react, they in effect ce ⁇ ment the bed material into a unified mass. Removing the bed material from the reactor vessel is a difficult and time-wasting procedure; and the removed material is environmentally unsafe. Wood chips are not suited for liq ⁇ uid streams; they become sodden, impairing perviousness of the bed.
  • That oxide whose particles are composed of a crystalline phase of Fe.,0. together with an amorphous
  • the surface area of that oxide is at least 4.0
  • U. S. Patent No. 4,366,131 shows of that oxide use to 2o sweeten gas in a dry process (analogous to the wood chip process) in a bed of inert particulate matter, there shown to be sand. While that patent shows that this special ox ⁇ ide will react effectively in a dry process, objectionable bed caking was encountered even though the bed was shallow.
  • the present invention provides a new porous mineral carrier for hydrogen sulfide reactants of the oxide type, and particularly for the non-polluting iron oxide above mentioned.
  • the new carrier is strong and light in weight; it maintains perviousness in deep beds, yielding a low pressure drop per foot of bed height. This characteristic obviously made the new carrier well suited for sweetening gas streams; breakthrough of the gas stream is avoided.
  • the oxide particles are originally somewhat bonded to and within the carrier particles pre-moistened with water. When the intermixture of this special iron oxide therein does not exceed about fifteen pounds of oxide per cubic foot of the carrier, the oxide material may reach nearly its maximum reactant capacity without causing the bed to solidify into a tightly cemented mass, as in the prior art. Experimentation with sweetening liquids followed, with unexpectedly favorable results.
  • Liquid hydrocarbons which have relatively few carbon atoms -- varying from propane (3) and butane (4) to at least decane (10) -- can be readily sweetened by the pre ⁇ sent particles in substantially the same manner as hydro ⁇ carbon gas. It was originally feared that the hydrocarbon liquid would wash the oxide particles from the surfaces and interstices of the carrier on which they have been distrib- uted. This proved not to occur when the flow rate through the particle bed was not excessive. Even the flow of water at substantially the same controlled flow rate did not wash away the oxide from the pre-moistened carrier particles. Thus, the new carrier material so retains the oxide particles as to sweeten liquid flows as well as gases .
  • the new carrier is preferably a mineral, advanta ⁇ geously clay-like in character such as montmorillonite, calcined at a temperature of approximately about 400° F. Montmorillonite so calcined has a dry weight of approxi- mately 42 lbs . per cubic foot, or in any event between 35 and 45 lbs. per cubic foot. Calcining yields a porous, yet strong texture; its crush strength is sufficient to bear without crushing an overlaying bed of the material, mois ⁇ tened and with oxide intermixed, well over five feet deep and, it appears as much as 20 feet deep.
  • the quantity of oxide is preferably about 15 lbs.
  • the oxide quantity may be as great as 35 pounds or more per cubic foot of carrier.
  • the calcined mineral car- rier material is substantially insoluble in water but has the capacity to absorb water sufficiently to disperse on its surface at least 15 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot. For all practical purposes , it is chemically inert to hydrogen sulfide, mercaptans, and the ' products of reaction thereof. For use in a bulk bed (rather than a cartridge, when so ⁇ lidifying is of no consequence) fine particles should be removed, so that no more than 3% of the calcined material will pass through a 30 mesh screen.
  • Iron oxides of both the old and the improved type tend to clump and bind together shortly after beginning to react with hydrogen sulfide. If these particles can be main- tained somewhat isolated from each other, a much greater part of their reactive capacity may be utilized. To main ⁇ tain such relative isolation, their carrier must have ade ⁇ quate surface areas to which they can cling. To obtain these the carrier must be somewhat pervious.
  • Calcining removes moisture and impurities from the present carrier mineral, and leaves a hard, strong, porous and pervious structure, not soluble in water, which may be readily wetted with water so that intermixed oxide parti ⁇ cles will cling, dispersed along the wet surfaces so pro- vided, and continue to do so even after being partly re ⁇ acted, rather than agglomerating with each other.
  • the amount of oxide clinging in this dispersed manner appears to be at least 9 lbs. of oxides and probably over 15 lbs. per cubic foot of the calcined wetted carrier material.
  • the necessary perviousness and surface area are pro ⁇ vided by calcining clay-like minerals, of which montmorillonite appears to be especially well suited.
  • Cal ⁇ cined montmorillonite possesses the strength required for such bed depth, together with such surface area including cracks, pores and interstices to which the oxide particles may cling substantially separated from each other.
  • the preferred clay mineral is montmorillonite calcined at a temperature of about 400°F. whose particle size is preferably between 4 mesh and 30 mesh, with no more than about 3% so small as to pass through a 30 mesh screen. Its dry weight is between 35 lbs. and 45 lbs. per cubic foot. A quantity of this material is placed in a rotary mixer, such as a typical concrete mixer, and rotated while a pre- determined quantity of water -- typically slightly less than one-third of the weight of the mineral -- is sprayed into the mixer, to assure thorough moistening. This is done slowly, preferably over a period as long as a half hour. Then a slightly greater quantity of the oxide parti- cles are slowly added while the mixing continues for per ⁇ haps another half hour.
  • a rotary mixer such as a typical concrete mixer
  • a small amount of sodium sulfite is preferably added as well, out of the belief that it en ⁇ hances reactivity.
  • the moisture causes the oxide particles to adhere to the surfaces and interstices of the calcined clay, in such manner as to avoid their clumping together.
  • An optimum mixture is believed to be approximately: Ingredient %_
  • Test No. 1 A 20" x 20 ' process tower was employed. Perlite containing approximately 20 lbs. per cubic foot of oxide was used. The material completely removed H_S for four days before breakthrough of H_S occurred. The mate ⁇ rial should have lasted for seven days . It was found that the perlite bed had compacted causing pressure in the bed to increase locally, causing channeling of the gas. Subse- quently the material was hard to remove.
  • Test No. 2 A 4" x 12 ' test tower was employed on the same location. Calcined clay (montmorillonite) containing 18 lbs. per cubic foot of the reactive iron oxide was used to fill the 12' test tower. The test was aborted pre a- turely due to an unrelated cause. Even though the oxide had not been fully reacted, the bed had largely solidified and was difficult to remove from the reactor.
  • Calcined clay montmorillonite
  • Test No. 3 The 4" x 12' test tower was employed. From the calcined clay material was removed all particles of less than 30 mesh size. To pack the tower, the pre ⁇ ferred oxide was loaded at the rate of 15 lbs. per cubic foot of carrier, instead of the 18 lbs. loading of Test No. 2. In this case the H_S and mercaptans appeared to be com ⁇ pletely reacted. The bed material was then easily removed from the reactor. While slightly agglomerated, either slight agitation or a water stream sufficed to dislodge it.
  • Test No. 4 This test was similar to Test No. 3 ex ⁇ cept in the following respec s: 1% of the minus 30 mesh material was permitted to remain, and 18 lbs. of oxide was added per cubic foot of the carrier material. At this in- . -
  • Test No. 5 The conditions of this test duplicated those of Test No. 4, except that only 15 lbs. of the pre ⁇ ferred oxide were used per cubic foot of the carrier mate ⁇ rial. The results were as in Test No. 3; excellent effi ⁇ ciency of reaction; the reacted bed was easy to remove. The test demonstrated a workable combination of particle size distribution and oxide loading. The conclusion drawn was: When the new carrier material with oxide intermixed is utilized in bulk in a reactor tower, time and labor are saved by keeping the oxide loadings under 18 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot of carrier.
  • Test No. 6 The purpose of this test was to evaluate the effectiveness of the new carrier with ordinary iron ox ⁇ ides.
  • Test No. 7 A similar run was made using the same iron oxide hydrate on wood chips, where similarly only slightly reacted, the fill was found to be already severely cemented; it had to be removed by acid and pressurized water. The rate of reaction of the hydrated iron oxide ma ⁇ terial was the same as on wood chips and the pressure drop was substantially less, comparable to that using the pre- ferred iron oxide on the carrier.
  • Test No. 9 Field Evaluation in Two-Tower System: Twelve test runs were made at a site having a reactor sys ⁇ tem comprising two towers in series, filled 10 feet deep, as with above Test 3, to provide an average reacted height of 5.98 feet (10 feet nominal).
  • the concentration of H.-S in the gas changes in time of progression through the bed, as does the reactant capacity of the partly reacted oxide particles whose theoretical reaction rate is R.
  • Test No. 10 A first series of tests was conducted to determine what rate of liquid flow through a bed of the material could be permitted without entraining and carry- ing away the oxide particles.
  • Hexane (which contains 6 carbon atoms) into which about 170 ppm. by weight of H_S had been dissolved, was put into a one liter filter flask.
  • the inlet side of the flask was connected to a nitrogen gas cylinder, and the outlet for liquid hexane was connected to the top of the chromatography column containing the prepared bed.
  • Gas at a measured flow rate forced liquid at the same flow rate down through the column, where samples were collected at the open stopcock.
  • 200 ml. samples of liquid flowing out of the column were collected at each of two liquid flow rates, 100 ml./min. (equivalent to a velocity of 1.3 ft./ in. ) and 25 ml. /min. (equivalent to .3 ft./min.).
  • the samples were collected after 200 ml. of liquid was discarded between collections to insure equilibration of the prepared mate ⁇ rial with the liquid at each flow rate.
  • Comparison strip 1 (no H_S): strip shiny and like new
  • Comparison strip 2 (hexane with H ⁇ S not passed through column): dark tarnish; Test strip exposed to collected fraction at 1.3 ft./min. through column: very slight tarnish;
  • Test No. 11 This test was performed to determine the flow properties when liquid was flowed from the bottom up through the column, packed as in Test No. 10. Flow rates varied from .3 ft./min. to 2 ft./min. At 1.5 ft./min. and below, there were no appreciable amounts of black oxide "fines" carried upward from the top of the packed column; above about 1.5 ft./min. appreciable amounts of fines were stripped from the column and carried along with the liquid hexane. It appears that flow from the bottom up toward the top of the bed is quite feasible as long as velocities less than 1.5 ' ft./min. are used. Test No. 12.
  • a bed instead prepared as aforemen- tioned was installed in the column, as in Test No. 11; and this time was wetted with pure water instead of hexane.
  • the flow experiment of Test No. 11 was repeated, but now water was sent from the bottom up through the column to see what velocities would produce stripping of oxide fines from the packed bed.
  • the results with water were identi ⁇ cal within experimental error with those obtained with hexane; stripping did not occur until flow velocities of 1.5 ft./min. or greater were used.
  • cartridge packs may be made up of the preferred ox ⁇ ide intermixed with the present carrier material, for use in relatively small normally cylindrical steel reactor vessels such as are commercially available for accepting cartridge fills of the type adapted for end-to-end flow.
  • cartridges are typically metal or plastic tubes hav- ing pierced screens at each end.
  • the cylinder and cartridges are provided in various depths, typically not more than 5' .

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Abstract

A mineral carrier for those iron oxides which react to remove hydrogen sulfide and mercaptans from fluid streams. The new carrier avoids the problem encountered with wood chip beds of bed solidification which occurs when reacted oxide particles adhere to each other. Calcined montmorillonite, for example, possesses the necessary crush strength, porosity, insolubility in water and wettability, to maintain bed perviousness and avoid caking as reaction continues to the full capacity of the oxide.

Description

DISPOSABLE OXIDE CARRIER FOR SCAVENGING HYDROGEN SULFIDE Background of the Invention Field of the Invention;
This invention relates to a mineral carrier for ox- ides, advantageously used in packed beds for scavenging hy¬ drogen sulfide and mercaptans from fluid streams such as natural gas, liquid hydrocarbons and steam. Cross-Reference to Related Applications;
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 07/498,412, filed March 26,
1990, entitled "Disposable Oxide and Carrier for Gas Stream Purification," in turn a continuation-in-part of Applica¬ tion Serial No. 07/400,379, filed August 30, 1989, of the same title, both to be abandoned. Description of the Related Art;
The wood chip process has for many years been used to scavenge hydrogen sulfide from gas streams . Describing this process generally, a stream of the polluted gas is driven through a bed of moistened wood chips containing a reactant iron oxide. While in widespread use, the process has numerous shortcomings, including that the pressure of the gas stream suffers a severe drop as it passes through the bed, and that as the oxides react, they in effect ce¬ ment the bed material into a unified mass. Removing the bed material from the reactor vessel is a difficult and time-wasting procedure; and the removed material is environmentally unsafe. Wood chips are not suited for liq¬ uid streams; they become sodden, impairing perviousness of the bed.
A greatly improved iron oxide was shown in U.S. Patent
5 No. 4,246,244. That oxide, whose particles are composed of a crystalline phase of Fe.,0. together with an amorphous
^, Fe υ o moiety, when suspended in a water slurry and reacted by hydrogen sulfide gas bubbled therethrough, creates a stable waste which after drying does not pollute the atmos-
T_Q phere. The surface area of that oxide is at least 4.0
2 m /g; when used in the "dry bed" process described, it has a kinetic "R" value in excess of 0.5 x 10 -4 ft.3/(min.-gram oxide ) . It is obtainable from Gas Sweetener Associates , Inc., St. Louis, Missouri. That oxide is hereinafter re- τ_5 ferred to as the "special" or "preferred" oxide; it is the oxide utilized in all of the tests and discussions which follow except where use of other oxides is particularly pointed out.
U. S. Patent No. 4,366,131 shows of that oxide use to 2o sweeten gas in a dry process (analogous to the wood chip process) in a bed of inert particulate matter, there shown to be sand. While that patent shows that this special ox¬ ide will react effectively in a dry process, objectionable bed caking was encountered even though the bed was shallow.
25 A partially effective expedient, leaving a substantial head-space above the bed and directing the gas upward through it to "fluidize" the bed, was likely to result in breakthrough of unscavenged gas.
While the foregoing patents were concerned with sweet-
30 ening gas, a limited use of that oxide to react hydrogen sulfide-polluted liquids is shown, for example, in U.S. Patent No. 4,344,842 in which anhydrous kerosene was simply flowed in admixture or contact with the oxide particles . The addition of the particles to aqueous drilling muds,
30 made corrosive by pollution with hydrogen sulfide, as well as oxygen, is taught in U.S. Patent No. 4,634,539.
Other types of sweetening processes, when applied to liquids, have been generally unsatisfactory. For example, the wood chip process , widely used for sweetening gas , is not suited for contaminated liquids; the chips become satu¬ rated non-uniformly, causing premature channeling through the chip bed, low reaction efficiencies and unpredictable results. Amine processes are expensive, and it is difficult to separate the amines from liquid hydrocarbons. Summary of the Invention
The present invention provides a new porous mineral carrier for hydrogen sulfide reactants of the oxide type, and particularly for the non-polluting iron oxide above mentioned. The new carrier is strong and light in weight; it maintains perviousness in deep beds, yielding a low pressure drop per foot of bed height. This characteristic obviously made the new carrier well suited for sweetening gas streams; breakthrough of the gas stream is avoided. The oxide particles are originally somewhat bonded to and within the carrier particles pre-moistened with water. When the intermixture of this special iron oxide therein does not exceed about fifteen pounds of oxide per cubic foot of the carrier, the oxide material may reach nearly its maximum reactant capacity without causing the bed to solidify into a tightly cemented mass, as in the prior art. Experimentation with sweetening liquids followed, with unexpectedly favorable results. Thus:
Liquid hydrocarbons which have relatively few carbon atoms -- varying from propane (3) and butane (4) to at least decane (10) -- can be readily sweetened by the pre¬ sent particles in substantially the same manner as hydro¬ carbon gas. It was originally feared that the hydrocarbon liquid would wash the oxide particles from the surfaces and interstices of the carrier on which they have been distrib- uted. This proved not to occur when the flow rate through the particle bed was not excessive. Even the flow of water at substantially the same controlled flow rate did not wash away the oxide from the pre-moistened carrier particles. Thus, the new carrier material so retains the oxide particles as to sweeten liquid flows as well as gases . The new carrier is preferably a mineral, advanta¬ geously clay-like in character such as montmorillonite, calcined at a temperature of approximately about 400° F. Montmorillonite so calcined has a dry weight of approxi- mately 42 lbs . per cubic foot, or in any event between 35 and 45 lbs. per cubic foot. Calcining yields a porous, yet strong texture; its crush strength is sufficient to bear without crushing an overlaying bed of the material, mois¬ tened and with oxide intermixed, well over five feet deep and, it appears as much as 20 feet deep. The quantity of oxide is preferably about 15 lbs. per cubic foot per car¬ rier, but in shallow beds, particularly those in cartridge form, the oxide quantity may be as great as 35 pounds or more per cubic foot of carrier. The calcined mineral car- rier material is substantially insoluble in water but has the capacity to absorb water sufficiently to disperse on its surface at least 15 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot. For all practical purposes , it is chemically inert to hydrogen sulfide, mercaptans, and the' products of reaction thereof. For use in a bulk bed (rather than a cartridge, when so¬ lidifying is of no consequence) fine particles should be removed, so that no more than 3% of the calcined material will pass through a 30 mesh screen.
Description of the Preferred Embodiment Even though the experience utilizing sand as the bed or carrier material, heretofore set forth, was not consid¬ ered commercially satisfactory for gas purification, sev¬ eral considerations led to the conclusion that a mineral carrier was necessary. Among these were the requirement that the carrier be chemically inert in the presence of hy- drogen sulfide and of its reaction products , and that the carrier be relatively strong so as to resist an overlaying weight of a bed at least 5' and as much as 20' deep. The problem of caking, encountered both with sand and with wood chips, was further analyzed, and led to the following the¬ ory, which test experience demonstrated was valid:
Iron oxides of both the old and the improved type tend to clump and bind together shortly after beginning to react with hydrogen sulfide. If these particles can be main- tained somewhat isolated from each other, a much greater part of their reactive capacity may be utilized. To main¬ tain such relative isolation, their carrier must have ade¬ quate surface areas to which they can cling. To obtain these the carrier must be somewhat pervious. Calcining removes moisture and impurities from the present carrier mineral, and leaves a hard, strong, porous and pervious structure, not soluble in water, which may be readily wetted with water so that intermixed oxide parti¬ cles will cling, dispersed along the wet surfaces so pro- vided, and continue to do so even after being partly re¬ acted, rather than agglomerating with each other. The amount of oxide clinging in this dispersed manner appears to be at least 9 lbs. of oxides and probably over 15 lbs. per cubic foot of the calcined wetted carrier material. The necessary perviousness and surface area are pro¬ vided by calcining clay-like minerals, of which montmorillonite appears to be especially well suited. Cal¬ cined montmorillonite possesses the strength required for such bed depth, together with such surface area including cracks, pores and interstices to which the oxide particles may cling substantially separated from each other.
It was not at first apparent that such a bed of clay particles with the oxide intermixed would remove hydrogen sulfide and mercaptans from liquid hydrocarbons also, es- pecially those hydrocarbon liquids with.10 or fewer carbon molecules , nor that hydrogen sulfide polluted water could likewise be purified by flowing through such a bed. Con¬ trolling the rate of liquid flow -- either upflow or downflow -- to 1 1/2 feet per minute, avoids- washing the oxide particles from the surfaces of the clay particles , as shown by the tests hereafter. Preparation of the Material:
The preferred clay mineral is montmorillonite calcined at a temperature of about 400°F. whose particle size is preferably between 4 mesh and 30 mesh, with no more than about 3% so small as to pass through a 30 mesh screen. Its dry weight is between 35 lbs. and 45 lbs. per cubic foot. A quantity of this material is placed in a rotary mixer, such as a typical concrete mixer, and rotated while a pre- determined quantity of water -- typically slightly less than one-third of the weight of the mineral -- is sprayed into the mixer, to assure thorough moistening. This is done slowly, preferably over a period as long as a half hour. Then a slightly greater quantity of the oxide parti- cles are slowly added while the mixing continues for per¬ haps another half hour. A small amount of sodium sulfite is preferably added as well, out of the belief that it en¬ hances reactivity. The moisture causes the oxide particles to adhere to the surfaces and interstices of the calcined clay, in such manner as to avoid their clumping together. An optimum mixture is believed to be approximately: Ingredient %_
Montmorillonite 59
Oxide (as above) 22 Water 18
Sodium sulfite 1
100 Wide divergence from the above proportions may be utilized; it is believed that, with any quantity of the clay there may be used, with advantage, roughly one-third as much by weight of both water and the oxide. Tests Related to Sweetening Gas:
The following tests were conducted at a gas well site whose inlet gas composition was as follows: carbonyl sul¬ fide 4 ppm, H_S 630 ppm, ethyl mercaptan 15 ppm, methyl mercaptan 4 ppm, propyl mercaptan 12 ppm, C4+ mercaptan 14, miscellaneous sulfides 10 ppm.
Test No. 1. A 20" x 20 ' process tower was employed. Perlite containing approximately 20 lbs. per cubic foot of oxide was used. The material completely removed H_S for four days before breakthrough of H_S occurred. The mate¬ rial should have lasted for seven days . It was found that the perlite bed had compacted causing pressure in the bed to increase locally, causing channeling of the gas. Subse- quently the material was hard to remove.
Test No. 2. A 4" x 12 ' test tower was employed on the same location. Calcined clay (montmorillonite) containing 18 lbs. per cubic foot of the reactive iron oxide was used to fill the 12' test tower. The test was aborted pre a- turely due to an unrelated cause. Even though the oxide had not been fully reacted, the bed had largely solidified and was difficult to remove from the reactor.
Test No. 3. The 4" x 12' test tower was employed. From the calcined clay material was removed all particles of less than 30 mesh size. To pack the tower, the pre¬ ferred oxide was loaded at the rate of 15 lbs. per cubic foot of carrier, instead of the 18 lbs. loading of Test No. 2. In this case the H_S and mercaptans appeared to be com¬ pletely reacted. The bed material was then easily removed from the reactor. While slightly agglomerated, either slight agitation or a water stream sufficed to dislodge it.
Test No. 4. This test was similar to Test No. 3 ex¬ cept in the following respec s: 1% of the minus 30 mesh material was permitted to remain, and 18 lbs. of oxide was added per cubic foot of the carrier material. At this in- . -
creased concentration of iron oxide the caking of the bed material was substantially increased, leading to the con¬ clusion that the oxide concentration was undesirably greater. Test No. 5. The conditions of this test duplicated those of Test No. 4, except that only 15 lbs. of the pre¬ ferred oxide were used per cubic foot of the carrier mate¬ rial. The results were as in Test No. 3; excellent effi¬ ciency of reaction; the reacted bed was easy to remove. The test demonstrated a workable combination of particle size distribution and oxide loading. The conclusion drawn was: When the new carrier material with oxide intermixed is utilized in bulk in a reactor tower, time and labor are saved by keeping the oxide loadings under 18 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot of carrier.
The tests listed hereafter were laboratory tests:
Test No. 6. The purpose of this test was to evaluate the effectiveness of the new carrier with ordinary iron ox¬ ides. A laboratory reactor 1 cm. x 25 cm. filled with 15 lbs. per cubic foot of a hydrated iron oxide of the gamma alpha crystalline form, commonly used to treat hydrogen sulfide, was intermixed with the calcined clay carrier. After the reaction had proceeded approximately one-half of 1% toward completion, the bed was checked and its material was found to be easily removable. At full reaction the bed was found still not tightly cemented. However, using such an oxide, all the reacted material would be acid soluble, and environmentally unsafe.
Test No. 7. A similar run was made using the same iron oxide hydrate on wood chips, where similarly only slightly reacted, the fill was found to be already severely cemented; it had to be removed by acid and pressurized water. The rate of reaction of the hydrated iron oxide ma¬ terial was the same as on wood chips and the pressure drop was substantially less, comparable to that using the pre- ferred iron oxide on the carrier.
Test No. 8. Pressure Drop Determinations: A bed of the calcined clay, only 1% of which was smaller than 30 mesh, packed in the proportion of 15 lbs. of reactive iron oxide per cubic foot of carrier, was found to be relatively porous, offering only small resistance to gas flow. Labo¬ ratory experiments using a water differential manometer re¬ sulted in determining the following coefficient correlating pressure drop dP (psi) to v (gas flow velocity in feet per minute), and bed height h (feet): dP = .0009 x v x h The coefficient .0009 was nearly constant over a wide range of gas velocities 0.8 ft/min. to 8 ft/min. This con¬ firms the uniform permeability of the bed even at low flow rates.
In contrast, in using the oxide with wood chips the initial pressure drop, before reacting the oxide, was ap¬ proximately .0015; after reaction in the field the pressure drop would be so much greater as to be likely to cause breakthrough and channeling of the gas.
Test No. 9. Field Evaluation in Two-Tower System: Twelve test runs were made at a site having a reactor sys¬ tem comprising two towers in series, filled 10 feet deep, as with above Test 3, to provide an average reacted height of 5.98 feet (10 feet nominal). The theoretical effective¬ ness quotient E of the preferred oxide material (how much hydrogen sulfide can be reacted per pound of oxide) was previously determined as: E=.715. The concentration of H.-S in the gas changes in time of progression through the bed, as does the reactant capacity of the partly reacted oxide particles whose theoretical reaction rate is R. The theo¬ retically predictable amount of hydrogen sulfide removable by each packed bed depends upon a number of variables , in¬ cluding the inlet velocity v of the gas. How much hydrogen sulfide should be reacted from a given gas stream by a given bed may be calculated by use of the following differ¬ ential equations for reaction and flow in a fixed bed: d(H?S) = -v x d(H S) - R (H-S) (Oxide) dt ax d(Oxide) = - R (H-S) (Oxide) dt E
For the twelve test runs so made the calculated pre¬ dicted amount of H.-S to be removed was 10.,263 lbs. The actual amount .found to be removed was 10,117 lbs. This demonstrated that the present material functions with highly predictable results .
While the foregoing tests were of streams of natural gas containing H.-S and mercaptans , it is apparent that the new inert mineral carrier will function as well to remove H_S from other gas streams such as geothermal steam. Tests Related to Sweetening Liquids:
Test No. 10. A first series of tests was conducted to determine what rate of liquid flow through a bed of the material could be permitted without entraining and carry- ing away the oxide particles. A bed of the material pre- * pared, as heretofore set out, was made by placing 105 g. of the material in a glass chromatography column 18 mm. in inner diameter by 40 cm. long, with a stopcock at the bot¬ tom. The final bed height was 34 cm. Reagent grade hex- ane was poured into the column to produce a wetted bed with very few air bubbles.
Hexane (which contains 6 carbon atoms) into which about 170 ppm. by weight of H_S had been dissolved, was put into a one liter filter flask. The inlet side of the flask was connected to a nitrogen gas cylinder, and the outlet for liquid hexane was connected to the top of the chromatography column containing the prepared bed. Gas at a measured flow rate forced liquid at the same flow rate down through the column, where samples were collected at the open stopcock. 200 ml. samples of liquid flowing out of the column were collected at each of two liquid flow rates, 100 ml./min. (equivalent to a velocity of 1.3 ft./ in. ) and 25 ml. /min. (equivalent to .3 ft./min.). The samples were collected after 200 ml. of liquid was discarded between collections to insure equilibration of the prepared mate¬ rial with the liquid at each flow rate.
50 ml. of each collected sample from the column, and two blank samples , one with H-S that had not passed through the column and one that was pure hexane containing no H-S, were each placed in a 50 ml. Erlenmeyer flask. In each of the four flasks a cleaned copper strip 1/2" wide by 3" long by .002" thick was inserted, and the stoppered flasks were then placed in a 100°F. oven for one hour. This "copper strip" test follows approximately the procedure given in ASTM Standard Test Method D 1838-84, "Copper Strip Corrosion by Liquified Petroleum (LP) Gases . "
Results of the "copper strip" comparison tests were as follows:
Comparison strip 1 (no H_S): strip shiny and like new;
Comparison strip 2 (hexane with H^S not passed through column): dark tarnish; Test strip exposed to collected fraction at 1.3 ft./min. through column: very slight tarnish;
Test strip exposed to collected fraction at .3 ft./min.: strip shiny and like new.
The foregoing tests proved that the described iron oxide distributed in the present carrier removed H_S from the hydrocarbon hexane at flows up to 1.3 ft./min. and substantially to 1.5 ft./min. Similar results are evident for any hydrocarbon liquid from liquid propane (3 carbon molecules) to decane (10 carbon molecules), since the physical and chemical properties of the series of hydro- carbons up to CIO are similar except for boiling and freezing points.
Test No. 11. This test was performed to determine the flow properties when liquid was flowed from the bottom up through the column, packed as in Test No. 10. Flow rates varied from .3 ft./min. to 2 ft./min. At 1.5 ft./min. and below, there were no appreciable amounts of black oxide "fines" carried upward from the top of the packed column; above about 1.5 ft./min. appreciable amounts of fines were stripped from the column and carried along with the liquid hexane. It appears that flow from the bottom up toward the top of the bed is quite feasible as long as velocities less than 1.5 'ft./min. are used. Test No. 12. A bed instead prepared as aforemen- tioned was installed in the column, as in Test No. 11; and this time was wetted with pure water instead of hexane. The flow experiment of Test No. 11 was repeated, but now water was sent from the bottom up through the column to see what velocities would produce stripping of oxide fines from the packed bed. The results with water were identi¬ cal within experimental error with those obtained with hexane; stripping did not occur until flow velocities of 1.5 ft./min. or greater were used. The conclusion follows that: a bed of the present material, so treated, will re- move H.-S from aqueous liquids, even water, with flow from the bottom up as well as from the top down, as long as the flow rate does not substantially exceed 1.5 ft./min. Alternative Embodiment:
Where only small quantities of gas are to be scav- enged, cartridge packs may be made up of the preferred ox¬ ide intermixed with the present carrier material, for use in relatively small normally cylindrical steel reactor vessels such as are commercially available for accepting cartridge fills of the type adapted for end-to-end flow. Such cartridges are typically metal or plastic tubes hav- ing pierced screens at each end. For various capacities of hydrogen sulfide removal, the cylinder and cartridges are provided in various depths, typically not more than 5' .
When such a cartridge is packed with the preferred ox- ide above described, utilizing the present carrier mate¬ rial , reaction presents no clean-out problems ; the car¬ tridges are simply removed and discarded. Hence the car¬ tridge pack is constituted slightly differently than the bed material Tests 3 and 5 above, in these respects: Since the bed depth is relatively small, and car¬ tridges are to be discarded, there is no need to avoid ag¬ glomeration of the bed; hence the proportion of oxide to carrier may be increased to preferably 30, or as much as 35 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot of carrier. Pressure drop is not a problem in the agglomerated bed even when high oxide concentrations result in solidification of the material. However if hydrogen sulfide is present in the gas stream in only very small concentrations, as little as 9 lbs. of ox¬ ide per cubic foot of carrier need be used. In either case it is not necessary to limit the amount of fine particles, compared to the reactor vessels heretofore described. Restoring dried-out beds;
The capacity of the present calcined clay-like mate¬ rial to absorb water without swelling as would impair per- meability, permits a bed to be rewetted; when used with the preferred oxide (not a hydrated iron oxide ) , beds which have been completely dried out and thus rendered less reac¬ tive may be restored to reactivity.
Little theoretical knowledge is available regarding the importance of water to the reaction of hydrogen sulfide by iron oxides. In using the present montmorillonite bed material with the special oxide intermixed and held by moisture to the porous bed material, it was first believed, that no added water would be necessary. This belief was continued by original experimental use at wells producing gas containing normal amounts of moisture, in the ordinar- ily expected temperature range and whose hydrogen sulfide content was substantial. Most natural gas streams contain adequate amounts of moisture and in reacting H-S, each molecule reacted yields a molecule of water. In some instances however, drying of the reactant bed follows from heat and low moisture content of the inflowing gas together with relatively low hydrogen sulfide content (hence little H_0 of reaction). In prior art usage of the wood chip process with hydrated iron oxide Fe_0-. x H-0, when these drying factors are present it is conventional to add alkaline water to the inflowing gas as the reaction progresses, before any substantial rise in H_S level in the outlet gas may be detected. Such water addition may cause wood chips to expand, impairing the flow of gas and causing its irregular distribution through the bed. However, with¬ out such addition of water, the oxide's water of hydration becomes exhausted and its reactivity terminates irrevers¬ ibly.
Using the present highly wettable new bed material along with the special oxide, even the complete drying out of the bed does not destroy the oxide, nor does added water cause it to swell; the bed remains uniformly permeable. Full reactivity may be restored by remoistening the porous bed particles , and thereafter reactivity is maintained by the addition of moisture into the inflowing gas stream. Two procedures for replacing and distributing water throughout the bed have been found effective. Under the first, the gas stream is cut off, the treating vessel is de-pressurized, and steam is injected into the bed; the steam permeates the bed and equilibrates its water content. Under the second procedure one merely injects water under pressure into the inflowing gas stream to saturate it; the porous bed particles take up the water from the gas stream with substantial uniformity. By these steps the bed is re- vitalized; it can again be used and continue in use until the reactive capacity of the oxide has been utilized.
The particulate nature of the calcined mineral parti¬ cles and the phenomenon that the moisture on their surfaces tends to retain the oxide particles, to avoid cementing the bed as the oxide particles react, offers the advantage of quick, easy clean-out and replacement of the bed when sub¬ stantially fully reacted, while meantime maintaining bed perviousness. Since the reaction products of the preferred oxide are non-polluting to the atmosphere, the easy clean- out affords great advantage to the present invention.
As modifications may be made in the embodiments herein described without departing from the scope of the inven¬ tion, it is intended that all matter contained in the fore¬ going description shall be interpreted as illustrative rather than limiting.

Claims

Claims
1. A carrier for an oxide-type reactant of hydrogen sulfide in a fluid stream, comprising a mineral material whose crush strength is sufficient to bear an overlaying bed of said material at least 5 feet deep, being further characterized in having substantial insolubility in water, surface area and absorptiveness of water sufficient to af¬ ford dispersion on its surface of at least nine pounds per cubic foot of reactive iron oxide, and substantial chemi- cal inertness to H-S and to products of reaction thereof.
2. A carrier as defined in Claim 1 in which at least the greater part of said mineral comprises particles which will pass through a 4 mesh screen, and no more than 3% is so small as to pass through a 30 mesh screen. 3. A carrier as defined in Claim 1 wherein the min¬ eral material is a calcined clay.
4. A carrier as defined in Claim 1 wherein the min¬ eral material is calcined montmorillonite.
5. A mixed reactant material and carrier for reac- tion of hydrogen sulfide and mercaptans in fluid streams, comprising the carrier defined in Claim 1, moistened, and having intermixed therewith an iron oxide capable of re¬ acting hydrogen sulfide.
6. A mixed reactant material and carrier for reac- tion of hydrogen sulfide and mercaptans in fluid streams as defined in Claim 5 , wherein said oxide is composed of a crystalline phase of Fe-,0. and an amorphous Fe-0.- moiety, has a surface area of at least 4.0 m /g, and a kinetic "R" value in excess of 0.5 x 10 -4 ft.3(min.-gram oxide). 7. A mixed reactant material and carrier as defined in Claim 6, in which said oxide particles are present in the proportion of substantially 15 lbs . of said oxide per cubic foot of said carrier material. 8. A mixed reactant material and carrier for reac- tion of hydrogen sulfide and mercaptans in fluid streams, comprising the carrier defined in Claim 1, moistened, and having intermixed therewith particles of iron oxide capa¬ ble of reacting hydrogen sulfide, in which said oxide par¬ ticles are present in the proportion of between 9 and 35 pounds of said oxide per cubic foot of said carrier mate¬ rial.
9. A cartridge-pack reactor bed for use in a cylin¬ drical reactor vessel for removing hydrogen sulfide from a fluid stream, comprising a tubular cartridge body having an inlet screen and an outlet screen, and having packed therebetween a fill of a carrier as defined in Claim 1, moistened, and intermixed with an oxide having the compo¬ sition of a crystalline phase of Fe_.0. and an amorphous
Fe_0.- moiety, a surface area of at least 4.0 m 2/g, and a kinetic "R" value in excess of 0.5 x 10~ ft. /(min.-gram oxide ) .
10. A cartridge-pack reactor bed as defined in Claim
9, in which the proportion of oxide to carrier is substan¬ tially 30 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot of carrier. ii. A cartridge-pack reactor bed as defined in Claim
10, in which the proportion of oxide to carrier is in the range between 9 lbs. to 35 lbs. of oxide per cubic foot of carrier.
12. As a packed bed process for reacting hydrogen sulfide out from a fluid stream without substantially ce¬ menting such bed, the method comprising calcining a clay¬ like mineral characterized by substantial insolubility and absorptiveness of water and crushing it into carrier par¬ ticles whose size is substantially between 30 mesh and 4 mesh, moistening said carrier particles and dispersing on their surfaces between substantially 9 and 18 lbs. per cu¬ bic foot of a particulate iron oxide of a type substan¬ tially inert to H_S and products of reaction thereof, forming a bed of said carrier particles with the oxide dispersed in their surfaces, and passing through such bed a fluid stream contaminated by hydrogen sulfide, whereby the oxide particles so dispersed will react such hydrogen sulfide without so agglomerating as to effectually cement such bed. 13. The method as defined in Claim 12, wherein the fluid stream is hydrocarbon gas.
14. The method as defined in Claim 12, wherein the inflowing fluid stream is hydrocarbon gas, together with the further steps, should said fluid stream cause the bed to dry out and thus become nonreactive before its reactive capacity is substantially utilized, of distributing water substantially uniformly throughout the bed, whereby the re¬ mainder of the reactive capacity of the bed may then be utilized. 15. The method as defined in Claim 12, wherein the fluid stream is a liquid flowing through said bed at a rate not substantially in excess of 1.5 ft./min.
16. The method as defined in Claim 12, wherein the fluid stream is a liquid hydrocarbon of the type character- ized by having up to substantially 10 carbon atoms.
17. The method as defined in Claim 12, wherein the fluid stream is aqueous.
18. The method as defined in Claim 12, wherein the said iron oxide is composed of a crystalline phase of Fe.,0. and an amorphous Fe_0-. moiety, has a surface area of at least 4.0 m /g, and a kinetic "R" value in excess of 0.5 x 10 -4 ft.3/(min.-gram oxide).
19. The new use of a mineral whose crush strength is sufficient to bear an overlaying bed of said material at least 5 feet deep, being further characterized in having substantial insolubility in water, surface area and absorptiveness of water sufficient to afford dispersion on its surface of at least nine pounds per cubic foot of reac¬ tive iron oxide, and substantial chemical inertness to H_S and to products of reaction thereof, comprising the steps of calcining said mineral and reducing its particle size so that the greater part will pass through a 4 mesh screen but only a substantially lesser part will pass through a 30 mesh screen, moistening said mineral particles with water, and intermixing therewith, oxide particles composed of a crystalline phase of Fe_0. and an amorphous Fe?0- moiety, has a surface area of at least 4.0 m /g, and a kinetic "R" value in excess of 0.5 x 10 -4 ft.3/(min.-gram oxide), whereby said oxide particles adhere to said mineral parti¬ cles, then preparing a bed of said intermixed particles, and flowing through such bed a fluid stream containing hy¬ drogen sulfide, whereby the adherence of the oxide parti¬ cles to the moistened mineral particles avoids cementing of the bed as the hydrogen sulfide reacts the oxide particles .
20. The new use as defined in Claim 20, wherein the fluid stream is liquid, and its flow through such bed is at a rate not substantially greater than 1.5 ft./min., whereb to avoid substantial washing of the oxide particles from the mineral particles.
21. The new use as defined in Claim 20 wherein the fluid stream is liquid of a type characterized by having n more than 10 carbon atoms .
22. The new use as defined in Claim 20 wherein the fluid stream is aqueous.
EP90912155A 1989-08-30 1990-08-13 Disposable oxide carrier for scavenging hydrogen sulfide Expired - Lifetime EP0444166B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US40037989A 1989-08-30 1989-08-30
US400379 1989-08-30
US49841290A 1990-03-26 1990-03-26
US498412 1990-03-26
PCT/US1990/004497 WO1991003422A1 (en) 1989-08-30 1990-08-13 Disposable oxide carrier for scavenging hydrogen sulfide

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EP0444166A1 true EP0444166A1 (en) 1991-09-04
EP0444166A4 EP0444166A4 (en) 1992-06-03
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CN (1) CN1043738C (en)
AT (1) ATE119503T1 (en)
AU (1) AU641931B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2040414C (en)
DE (1) DE69017656T2 (en)
DK (1) DK0444166T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2070332T3 (en)
NO (1) NO177378C (en)
RO (1) RO109822B1 (en)
RU (1) RU2080158C1 (en)
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US6126911A (en) * 1992-05-04 2000-10-03 The Sulfatreat Company Metal oxide product suitable for use in dehydrated gas
MX2009002072A (en) * 2006-08-24 2009-04-24 Delbert C Scranton Jr Method for producing metal oxide compositions and coated substrates.
US8445063B2 (en) * 2007-08-23 2013-05-21 Scutter Enterprises, L.L.C. Method for producing dry metal oxide compositions and coated substrates
CN102764629B (en) * 2012-08-17 2013-09-18 太原理工大学 Method for preparing absorbing agent for medium-temperature gas desulfurization

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JPH05222003A (en) * 1991-06-13 1993-08-31 F Hoffmann La Roche Ag Sulfonamide and use thereof as medicine
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JPH05222003A (en) * 1991-06-13 1993-08-31 F Hoffmann La Roche Ag Sulfonamide and use thereof as medicine
JPH05221275A (en) * 1992-02-14 1993-08-31 Suzuki Motor Corp Mounting structure of wire harness for automobile

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DK0444166T3 (en) 1995-03-27
NO177378C (en) 1995-09-06
AU6170690A (en) 1991-04-08
AU641931B2 (en) 1993-10-07
DE69017656T2 (en) 1995-08-31
CN1049798A (en) 1991-03-13
WO1991003422A1 (en) 1991-03-21
ATE119503T1 (en) 1995-03-15
DE69017656D1 (en) 1995-04-13
NO177378B (en) 1995-05-29
RU2080158C1 (en) 1997-05-27
RO109822B1 (en) 1995-06-30
UA26273A (en) 1999-07-19
ES2070332T3 (en) 1995-06-01
EP0444166B1 (en) 1995-03-08
NO911709D0 (en) 1991-04-30
CA2040414C (en) 1998-04-07
CA2040414A1 (en) 1991-03-01
EP0444166A4 (en) 1992-06-03
NO911709L (en) 1991-06-28
CN1043738C (en) 1999-06-23

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